He told ITV’s Good Morning Britain today that he was “very angry” that this election result could derail Brexit.

Mr Farage said he put himself behind a reformed Ukip: “If we don’t get the kind of Brexit that people voted I will have no choice but to throw myself back into politics.

“The people who voted Brexit meant it, they will not be changing their minds.”

He in separate interviews that if Theresa May loses in her bid to retain a Conservative majority in the General Election “we may well be looking down the barrel of a second referendum” as he vowed to return to politics if Corbyn saw success.

This has now been confirmed as the outcome as the Tories failed to keep a majority.

The former Ukip leader told the BBC: “If we get a Corbyn election, then Brexit is in trouble.”

Adding: “Let’s see.. but I do think this – let’s say May scrapes through I’m not sure her cred is going to be very strong in Brussels.

“The [Brexit] timetable is likely to get pushed back.”

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But he said officials in Brussels "will have looked at the exit polls and be cheering very loudly because right now, if we believe the exit polls, Brexit is under a bit of threat".

This morning Ukip faces questions about its future as the exit poll indicates it won't win a single seat.

The troubled party leader Paul Nuttall faces a tough challenge to keep the party relevant as their vote share fell drastically from the last election.

Some of the key details from the turbulent election night:

Hung parliament confirmed with Tories missing out on majority of 326 with polls predicting 318 seats - down from 330

Labour forecast to take 262 - up from 232 in 2015.

Theresa May faces mounting pressure – with the odds slashed on Boris Johnson to be the next PM

Fears grow Brexit negotiations could be sunk if Mrs May does not secure a majority

Home Secretary Amber Rudd holds on to Hastings seat by barely 300 votes meaning she stays a contender to replace the PM

Huge losses for SNP as former chief Alex Salmond and deputy leader Angus Robertson are both beaten by the Tories.

Labour on march in London beating Tories to Battersea constituency

Pound slides two per cent as exit poll predicts hung parliament

Ukip voters desert party with vote share down by ten per cent - but not all move to the Tories

Growing fears that Mrs May will have to call a second election later this year

Earlier this year Ukip insisted they would fight to be the "guard dogs of Brexit" and hold the Government's feet to the fire - but as it the party looked to be getting no seats in Westminster its future appeared shaken.

Of Mrs May he said: "The Prime Minister came across as insincere and frankly robotic."

When asked by Andrew Marr if he thought MPs would try to remove her as leader, he said: "The Prime Minister's credibility as leader of that party is fatally damaged."